Posted on 12/14/2001 10:25:12 AM PST by William Wallace
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:07:09 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
IT ISN'T THE CASE that the parents of John Walker Lindh - the Marin County child of privilege turned Taliban terrorist - never drew the line with their son.
True, they didn't do so when he was 14 and his consuming passion was collecting hip-hop CDs with especially nasty lyrics.
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
And yes, I have one H*LL of a big problem with that; that's why I'm a libertarian conservative.
75 posted on 12/14/01 2:26 PM Pacific by headsonpikes
Absolutely! I always raised my kids with strict guidelines because I knew they would rebel at something. If the kids have no guidelines they will pick the most outrageous thing to do -- quite possibly something harmful or dangerous. With strict guidelines, their rebellion will be within the norm of comventional behavior.
I can't tell you how many times I heard my husband say, "No you can't do that. I don't care what the other kids are doing, you can't do that because you are a (insert family name here)." In my own adolescence, I was told that I couldn't do such and such because my parents were teachers. Same concept, but a concept that is often missing in today's fractured families where mom and dad are too busy with their careers or other relationships to pay attention to what their kids are doing.
I thank God every day that all our children grew up without any serious scrapes, graduated from college, and are raising families with similar rules to what they experienced in their own childhoods. Not only did I have God's help, I had the help of a husband who was involved with their lives -- and he says the same about me.
All kids crave standards and discipline. In fact, I think all human beings do.
BTW, I nominate WW's essay as essay of the week.
A few acqaintences told me they went "clean(republican only)"--just to "cross the street"...
renounced their libertarian ways(fear-guilt).
I'll pray for you!
Or they could of found a Charlie Manson to lead their feeble brains.
I'm flattered you mistook Jeff Jacoby's for one of my rants. He's one of my favorite columnists and a phenomenally talented writer IMO.
Reading this I couldn't help but think of Geraldo's infamous line about wanting to hug Mr. President-Scumbag, known adulterer and liar, and probable rapist that he is notwithstanding. What is it about liberals that they want to "hug" such people? I'm thinking there must be some kind of pathology here specific to liberalism, because I wouldn't want to be anywhere near these kinds of people, much less hug them.
Awesome read..BTTT
Very interesting observation.
Nice to see ya, WW. Thanks for the ping.
Despite the lack of discipline and moral instruction, John Walker probably learned much from his parents. He probably learned that liberalism condones and celebrates totalitarian dictatorships and fanatical revolutionary ideologues. He must have learned that certain forms of bigotry are not only permissible, but mandatory, if its targets were Republicans, white males, black conservatives, pro-life advocates, evangelical and fundamentalist Christians, cigarette smokers and gun owners. He surely learned to show zero tolerance for opposing viewpoints and how to demonize and destroy one's political opponents. He undoubtedly was taught to despise his country and to blame America for most of the evils in the world.
I suspect that John Walker learned to be a good Liberal from the example of his parents. Joining forces with the Taliban and the Al Qaeda network was the logical next step.
Isn't this a perfect example of liberalism at its worst? The kid had everything, yet he had nothing. Liberalism took it away in a mad rush of non-judgmental political correctness. A pioneer family with 12 kids in a one room log cabin had a richer life that this miscreant.
Make no mistake, John Walker should be shot at sunrise, but maybe his parents should have to be the ones to pull the trigger as punishment for creating the piece of filth that they did.
It is that. The kid had everything he didn't need, and nothing he did need. I'm not perplexed at all that he ended up throwing his lot in with the barbarians. He likely grew up in a moral vacuum, and something had to fill it. We see what that turned out to be. Its sad, but not surprising.
Undisaplined
Steinbrennerized!
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